Scientology Volunteer Ministers Haiti:Over 284,000 people helped

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Haiti
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9 May 2010 |

Since the Haiti earthquake hit on January 12, 2010, over 300 Volunteer Ministers from 22 countries have arrived in Haiti to provide help, and have trained thousands of Haitians as Volunteer Ministers themselves.

Training others to help.

Medical care.

Distribution of food and water.

Reconstruction work in a hospital in Port-au-Prince.

Volunteer Ministers arrange delivery of supplies and other aid materials, including the “Lifeboat for Haiti,” which transported over 100 tons of supplies from the US to Haiti.

Scientology Volunteer Ministers “Lifeboat for Haiti.”

Cleanup activities during the short rainy season, mid-April 2010.

Caring for orphans.

In the first week following the Haiti earthquake, the Church of Scientology Volunteer Minister corps mobilized and safely transported more than 360 rescue and medical professionals and Volunteer Ministers to Haiti. Donations of food and medicine were raised and the supplies were brought into Haiti for distribution, in coordination with the United Nations. Within ten days over 100 Volunteer Ministers were working in Haiti.

By the end of the second week after the disaster hit Haiti, they had established themselves as a stable source of help at the General Hospital of Port-au-Prince, the University of Miami tent hospital and in the many makeshift hospitals around the city. One Volunteer Minister team helped a Haitian aid organization rebuild an orphanage that took in and fed about 100 orphans to date.

Other Volunteer Ministers have teamed up with military or aid organization units and are organizing the distribution of food and medical supplies across the western part of Haiti. Since then the Scientology Volunteer Ministers expanded their organizational support to refugee camps outside Port-au-Prince, including Jacmel in the south of Haiti.

Since February 2010, Volunteer Ministers units in Haiti have set up eight stations around Haiti.

Throughout the day, Scientology Volunteer Ministers helped injured and distressed Haitians to cope with their injuries and losses and gave them hope. They assisted medical professionals in operating rooms, delivered babies, organized medical supplies and the transport, care and feeding of patients.

In recent months, the Volunteer Ministers have helped in the reconstruction of clinics, schools and orphanages. They have also worked to improve sanitation, building facilities needed in refugee camps, while training many locals on Volunteer Minister techniques.

Summary (Updated: 8 May 2010)

Since the disaster hit Haiti on 12 January 2010, over 300 Scientology Volunteer Ministers from 22 countries got active and:

helped over 284,000 people, including thousands of orphans, with shelter, food, basic medical and other care

arranged and delivered over 262,000 pounds of food, medical and other supplies including a truck and a complete ambulance

arranged funding for the transport of over 360 medical professionals, emergency workers, engineers and sanitation experts in charter flights from New York, Los Angeles and Miami

constructed and manned ten Volunteer Minister camps to be closer to where help is needed

trained over 280 Haitian Volunteer Minister teams

Overview

The Scientology Volunteer Ministers corps is a program of the Church of Scientology providing disaster relief and emergency response. Created more than thirty years ago by Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard, the program has expanded to over 200,000 Volunteer Ministers worldwide who have served at over 185 worst-case disaster sites, including Ground Zero after 9/11, the Southeast Asia tsunami, Hurricane Katrina and the Haiti earthquake.

Volunteer Ministers have trained and partnered with more than 500 different groups, organizations and agencies including the Red Cross, FEMA, the National Guard, and police and fire departments and are active members of NVOAD (National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster). The Volunteer Ministers corps motto is “Something Can Be Done About It.”

In 2001, more than 800 VMs responded to the World Trade Center disaster and provided spiritual and practical aid to emergency workers for many weeks. They have also been an integral part of rescue and salvage efforts at the sites of hurricanes, floods, earthquakes and fires.

More than 500 VMs from eleven nations served in relief efforts in Southeast Asia, India and Sri Lanka in 2004 after the tsunami. Their work was reported on by international media including CNN, The Economist, Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal.

The service of the Scientology Volunteer Ministers has been recognized by politicians, police, military, other relief agencies and civic authorities. A mayor in Louisiana whose city had been hit by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 said, “I was very happy when more than 900 of your Church Volunteer Ministers arrived in my city from all over the world and became a major force in bringing physical and spiritual help to those in need.”

Scientology Volunteer Ministers are organized in Churches of Scientology Disaster Response (CSDR) teams. These teams, wearing their signature yellow shirts, arrive on a scene shortly after the first responders. They meet with local emergency managers and law enforcement officials to coordinate their actions and provide any immediate assistance needed, such as organizing a confused area, supplying food and water, manning PODs (points of distribution) and offering volunteers to assist with needed projects. As soon as possible they begin providing “Assists” (an action taken to help a person confront physical difficulties and alleviate a present time discomfort, pain or trauma) to survivors, first responders and caregivers as needed.

In the first week following the Haiti earthquake, the Church of Scientology Volunteer Minister corps has mobilized and safely transported more than 350 rescue and medical professionals and Volunteer Ministers to Haiti. Donations for about forty tons of food and medicine were raised and the supplies were brought into Haiti for distribution, in coordination with the United Nations. Within ten days over 100 Volunteer Ministers were working in Haiti.

By the end of the second week after the disaster hit Haiti, they had established themselves as a stable source of help at the General Hospital of Port-au-Prince and the University of Miami tent hospital and in the many makeshift hospitals around the city. One Volunteer Minister team helped a Haitian aid organization to rebuild an orphanage that could take in and feed about 100 orphans to date.

Others have teamed up with military or aid organization units and are organizing the distribution of food and medical supplies across the western part of Haiti. Since then the Scientology Volunteer Ministers expanded their organizational and logistics support to refugee camps outside Port-au-Prince, for example in Jacmel in the south of Haiti.

Since February 2010 Volunteer Ministers units in Haiti have set up eight camps around Haiti. Another camp was set up in the Dominican Republic to arrange logistics for food and supplies to go into Haiti.

Throughout the day, Scientology Volunteer Ministers are helping injured and distressed Haitians to cope with their injuries and losses and giving them hope. Scientology Volunteer Ministers are also assisting medical professionals in the operating rooms; delivering babies, organizing medical supplies or the transport, care and feeding of patients. In the fourth month after the main earthquake, trained Volunteer Ministers help in the physical reconstruction of the country; building shelters, reconstructing sewage and water systems and training locals.